Page:Insect Literature by Lafcadio Hearn.djvu/382

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through the streets crying his wares; but hired a number of servants to carry the cages. Tradition says that while going his rounds he used to wear a katabira made of a much-esteemed silk stuff called sukiya, together with a fine Hakata-girdle; and that his elegant way of dressing proved of much service to him in his business.

Two men, whose names have been preserved, soon entered into competition with Yasubei. The first was Yasakura[1] Yasuzō, of Honjo-ku, by previous occupation a sahainin, or property-agent. He prospered, and became widely known as Mushi-Yasu,—"Yasu- the-Insect-Man." His success encouraged a former fellow-sahainin, Genbei of Uyeno, to go into the same trade. Genbei likewise found insect-selling a lucrative occupation, and earned for himself the sobriquet[2] of Mushi-Gen, by which he is yet remembered. His descendants in Tōkyō to-day are ame-manufacturers; but they still carry on the hereditary insect-business during the summer and autumn months; and one of the firm was kind enough to furnish me with many of the facts recorded in this little essay.

Chūzō, the father and founder of all this curious commerce, died without children; and sometime in

  1. Yasukura の誤植。
  2. sobriquet—nickname.